
What Does OpenAI Owe Studio Ghibli?
A few weeks ago, OpenAI pulled off one of the greatest corporate promotions in recent memory. Whereas the initial launch of ChatGPT, back in 2022, was 'one of the craziest viral moments i'd ever seen,' CEO Sam Altman wrote on social media, the response to a new upgrade was, in his words, 'biblical': 1 million users supposedly signed up to use the chatbot in just one hour, Altman reported, thanks to a new, more permissive image-generating capability that could imitate the styles of various art and design studios. Altman called it 'a new high-water mark for us in allowing creative freedom.'
Almost immediately, images began to flood the internet. The most popular style, by a long shot, was that of Studio Ghibli, the Japanese animation studio co-founded by Hayao Miyazaki and widely beloved for films such as Spirited Away and Princess Mononoke. Ghibli's style was applied to family portraits, historical events including 9/11, and whatever else people desired. Altman even changed his X avatar to what appears to be a Ghiblified version of himself, and posted a joke about the style's sudden popularity overtaking his previous, supposedly more important work.
The Ghibli AI phenomenon is often portrayed as organic, driven by the inspiration of ChatGPT users. On X, the person credited with jump-starting the trend noted that OpenAI had been 'incredibly fortunate' that 'the positive vibes of ghibli was the first viral use of their model and not some awful deepfake nonsense.' But Altman did not appear to think it was luck. He responded, 'Believe it or not we put a lot of thought into the initial examples we show when we introduce new technology.' He has personally reposted numerous Ghiblified images in addition to the profile picture that appears atop every one of his posts, which he added less than 24 hours after the Ghibli-esque visuals became popular; OpenAI President Greg Brockman has also recirculated and celebrated these images.
This is different from other image-sharing trends involving memes or GIFs. The technology has given ChatGPT users control over the visual languages that artists have honed over the course of their careers, potentially devaluing those artists' styles and destroying their ability to charge money for their work. Existing laws do not explicitly address generative AI, but there are plausible arguments that OpenAI is in the wrong and could be liable for millions of dollars in damages—some of those arguments are now being tested in a case against another image-generating AI company, Midjourney.
It's worth noting that OpenAI and Studio Ghibli could conceivably have a deal for the promotion, similar to the ones the tech company has struck with many media publishers, including The Atlantic. But based on Miyazaki's clear preference for hand-drawn work and distaste for at least certain types of computer-generated imagery, this seems unlikely. Neither company answered my questions about whether such a deal had been made, and neither Miyazaki nor Studio Ghibli have made any public remarks on the situation.Individual works of art are protected by copyright, but visual styles, such as Studio Ghibli's, are not. The legal logic here is that styles should be allowed to evolve through influence and reinterpretation by other artists. That creative and social process is how van Gogh led to Picasso, and Spenser to Shakespeare. But a deluge of people applying Ghibli's style like an Instagram filter, without adding any genuine creative value, isn't a collective effort to advance our visual culture. The images are also the direct result of a private company promoting a tech product, in part through its executives' social media, with the ability to manufacture images in a specific style. In response to a broader request for comment, a spokesperson for OpenAI told me, 'We continue to prevent generations in the style of individual living artists, but we do permit broader studio styles.'
Still, this has the flavor of an endorsement deal, such as the ones Nike has made with LeBron James, and Pepsi with Beyoncé: Use ChatGPT; make Studio Ghibli art! These kinds of endorsements typically cost millions of dollars. Consider what happened in 1985, when Ford Motor Company wanted to promote one of its cars with an ad campaign featuring popular singers. Ford's advertising agency, Young & Rubicam, asked Bette Midler to record her hit song 'Do You Want to Dance?' but she declined. Undeterred, they approached one of Midler's backup singers and asked her to perform the song in Midler's style. She accepted, and imitated Midler as well as she could. The ad aired. Midler sued.
In court, the judge described the central issue as 'an appropriation of the attributes of one's identity,' quoting from a previous case that had set precedent. Young & Rubicam had chosen Midler not because they wanted just any good singer but because they wanted to associate their brand with the feelings evoked by Midler's particular, recognizable voice. 'When a distinctive voice of a professional singer is widely known and is deliberately imitated in order to sell a product,' wrote the court, 'the sellers have appropriated what is not theirs.' Young & Rubicam had violated Midler's 'right of publicity,' in the language of the law. Midler received a $400,000 judgment (the equivalent of approximately $1 million today).
OpenAI risked ending up in a similar lawsuit last year when it used a voice many people thought sounded similar to Scarlett Johansson's to promote its voice-assistant product. Like Midler, Johansson had been asked to participate, and declined. Experts believed she had a viable right-of-publicity case against OpenAI. Johansson's lawyers sent letters to OpenAI but did not file a formal legal complaint. (OpenAI denied that the voice was modeled on Johansson's, but removed it and apologized to the actor.)
The average person seeing a torrent of images in the Studio Ghibli style, with captions praising ChatGPT, might reasonably infer that Miyazaki himself endorses or is associated with OpenAI, given that he is the most famous artist at the studio and has directed more of its films than any other. That people tend to call the aesthetic Ghibli's doesn't change the fact that the style is most recognizably Miyazaki's, present even in his early work, such as the 1979 film Lupin III: The Castle of Cagliostro, which was created six years before Ghibli was founded. Surely many people recognize Spirited Away as Miyazaki's and have never heard of Studio Ghibli.
Besides a right-of-publicity complaint, another legal option might be to file a complaint for false endorsement or trade-dress infringement, as other artists have recently done against AI companies. False endorsement aims to prevent consumer confusion about whether a person or company endorses a product or service. Trade-dress law protects the unique visual cues that indicate the source of a product and distinguish it from others. The classic Coca-Cola bottle shape is protected by trade dress. Apple has also acquired trade-dress protection on the iPhone's general rectangular-with-rounded-corners shape—a design arguably less distinctive (and therefore less protectable) than Ghibli's style.
In August, a judge agreed that false-endorsement and trade-dress claims against Midjourney were viable enough to litigate, and found it plausible that, as the plaintiffs allege, Midjourney and similar AI tools use a component that functions as 'a trade dress database.'
Regardless of what the courts decide or any action that Studio Ghibli takes, the potential downsides are clear. As Greg Rutkowski, one of the artists involved in the case against Midjourney, has observed, AI-generated images in his style, captioned with his name, may soon overwhelm his actual art online, causing 'confusion for people who are discovering my works.' And as a former general counsel for Adobe, Dana Rao, commented to The Verge last year, 'People are going to lose some of their economic livelihood because of style appropriation.' Current laws may not be up to the task of handling generative AI, Rao suggested: 'We're probably going to need a new right here to protect people.' That's not just because artists need to make a living, but because we need our visual aesthetics to evolve. Artists such as Miyazaki move the culture forward by spending their careers paying attention to the world and honing a style that resonates. Generative AI can only imitate past styles, thus minimizing the incentives for humans to create new ones. Even if Ghibli has a deal with OpenAI, ChatGPT allows users to mimic any number of distinct studio styles: DreamWorks Animation, Pixar, Madhouse, Sunrise, and so on. As one designer recently posted, 'Nobody is ever crafting an aesthetic over decades again, and no market will exist to support those who try it.'
Years from now, looking back on this AI boom, OpenAI could turn out to be less important for its technology than for playing the role of provocateur. With its clever products, the company has rapidly encouraged new use cases for image and text generation, testing what society will accept legally, ethically, and socially. Complaints have been filed recently by many publishers whose brands are being attached to articles invented or modified by chatbots (which is another kind of misleading endorsement). These publishers, one of which is The Atlantic, are suing various AI companies for trademark dilution and trademark infringement, among other things. Meanwhile, as of today, Altman is still posting under his smiling, synthetic avatar.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Fast Company
44 minutes ago
- Fast Company
Where the design jobs are in 2025
BY Generative AI—and the velocity of its evolution—is forcing every breed of designer to contemplate a future without them. Will Midjourney and DALL-E eliminate the need for graphic designers? Will Claude and Gemini obviate the UX lead? What happens to motion artists in a world where Sora supposedly becomes the newest auteur? We're no sages. And we're certainly not clairvoyant. But we can comfortably say that, even if an AI-driven design industry apocalypse is coming, it hasn't arrived yet. Our second annual report on the state of the design industry draws from a dataset of 176,000 job listings we've gathered on Google Jobs (which consolidates listings from across the internet, including Indeed, LinkedIn, and regional job boards) from October 2023 to February 2025. They span several design disciplines: graphic, interior, game, urban, UX, product, and architectural. The clearest and perhaps most reassuring takeaway this year? Designers are still needed. Graphic and UX design job postings are flat from last year, game design postings are up, and urban design postings are way up. Only architects and product designers saw a dip, with postings for the latter down 24% from last year. So it's not time yet to abandon that art or architecture degree in order to become a prompt engineer.


Tom's Guide
an hour ago
- Tom's Guide
I stopped using punctuation in my prompts — here's why I swear by it now
Do you really need punctuation, spell-check and proper grammar when chatting with AI? I've tested how being polite alters response, so I just had to know if the tone and content of chatbot replies changed based on whether I typed properly or as if I was texting with my eyes closed. To find out just how much punctuation (or the lack of it) shapes AI responses, I tested a range of prompts on several different chatbots including Gemini, Claude and ChatGPT. I tested everything from blog brainstorming and birthday messages to breaking news and weekend planning — all in two versions: buttoned-up and grammar-perfect vs. casual, typo-riddled. I even threw in an emoji prompt for differences were far more revealing than I expected. Prompt 1: 'Can you help me brainstorm blog post ideas about electric vehicles?'Prompt 2: 'can u help me brainstorm blogg ideas about electric vehiclez'Punctuation: This take is definitely geared toward readers who want the big picture. People who care about where the EV market is going, not just where it is today. It leans analytical and future-forward, touching on tech trends, policy implications and how EVs fit into broader conversations about sustainability and innovation. No punctuation & errors: This one is more grounded and relatable; it's the version that speaks directly to people trying to figure out if an EV is right for their life right now. It's less about macro trends and more about everyday decisions: charging logistics, cost savings and what it actually feels like to own and drive an With punctuation, the chatbot zoomed out, focusing on the bigger picture like tech trends, sustainability and market direction. Response 2 zooms in for results about the everyday experience of owning an EV, offering practical insights for mainstream consumers and potential buyers. Prompt 1: 'Write a funny birthday message to a coworker!'Prompt 2: 'write a funnie bday msge to a coworker'Punctuation: More polished and structured. Uses full sentences, proper grammar, punctuation and slightly more formal language (e.g., "significantly less of a drag," "skillfully pretending," "tangible asset"). Humor is witty and situational. No punctuation & errors: More casual and conversational, mimicking texting/informal chat. Uses abbreviations ("hbd", "ur", "bc", "ngl"), slang ("suck less", "wild", "bare minimum") and shorter, punchier phrasing. Humor is more direct and sometimes With punctuation, the response is clean, composed and leans into clever, well-crafted language with a polished tone and structured delivery. Without punctuation, the response is looser and more spontaneous, using internet slang and a casual voice that feels like a text from a friend. Get instant access to breaking news, the hottest reviews, great deals and helpful tips. Prompt 1: "Please tell me the top current news stories."Prompt 2: "plz tell me the top curentnews stories"Punctuation: Leads with Israel's strike on Iran ("Operation Rising Lion") but provides less tactical detail. Focuses on broader impacts (global markets, Iran's response). Includes Sen. Padilla's arrest as a separate major story. No punctuation & errors: Leads with far more detailed military specifics of Israel's strike (targets: Natanz + Fordow; scale: 200 jets, 330 munitions; agencies: IDF + Mossad). Immediately follows with a dedicated section on market reactions (" Oil, equities react...").Results: The prompt with punctuation delivered a broader, multi-story news roundup with geopolitical and market context; lighter on specifics. The prompt without punctuation felt like it was tactical-heavy with a focus on financial fallout and really no secondary news. Prompt 1 without emoji: 'Suggest weekend activities.'Prompt 2 with emoji: 'suggest wknd activities *smiley emoji*'Without emoji: Highly structured and categorized by activity type (Outdoor, Cultural, Social, Relaxing, Learning), offering a comprehensive menu of activities. It ends with a practical question. Emoji: Emphasizes fun, spontaneity and uplifting experiences (e.g., "spontaneous road trip," "backyard movie night," "karaoke night"). Features more whimsical, playful and novelty-focused activities like apple picking, mini golf, stargazing, escape rooms or visiting sunflower fields. Results: Without an emoji in the prompt, the response is more structured and utilitarian, offering categorized options based on activity type and ending with a practical, mood-based decision prompt. The response completely changed with an emoji with a more playful and emotionally driven tone, focusing on spontaneous, feel-good activities and an emphasis on immediate joy. Prompt 1: 'I have a busy weekend and am trying to organize my schedule. I have to do laundry, organize the basement, attend a soccer tournament and celebrate Father's Day. Help me plan.'Prompt 2: 'i have a busy weekend and am trying to organize my schedule i have to do laundry organize the basement attend a soccer tournament and celebrate fathers day'With punctuation: Although the responses are very similar, the response with punctuation is slightly more punctuation: This response offers flexibility and acknowledges The response with punctuation feels more structured and formal, offering a clear but slightly rigid tone. In contrast, the version without punctuation conveys more openness and adaptability, reflecting a looser, more conversational style. So, does punctuation matter when you talk to a chatbot? Surprisingly, yes! But maybe not in the way you think. Using punctuation tends to make the AI sound more polished, structured and formal, often zooming out to give big-picture takes. Leave it out, and the tone shifts to something looser, more conversational and often more practical or emotionally resonant. In the end, the 'right' way to prompt depends on what you're looking for: thoughtful analysis or text-from-a-friend vibes. Either way, the choice is yours. Period (or no period, your choice).


Business Insider
an hour ago
- Business Insider
Cowen Doubles Down on AMD Stock
Chip stock Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ:AMD) hasn't managed to light a fire under investors when it comes to its AI narrative. Expectations were riding high ahead of the recent Advance AI event, but the showcase came and went without delivering the stock a much-needed jolt. Confident Investing Starts Here: That said, while the event failed to move the needle on Wall Street, it wasn't without substance. AMD unveiled the MI350 series and ROCm 7, teased its upcoming MI400 'Helios' rack-scale solution, and even featured a cameo from OpenAI's Sam Altman. Cowen analyst Joshua Buchalter acknowledges the market's muted reaction, attributing it to the absence of financial updates. Still, he views the event as a meaningful step forward. 'We think AMD is laying important groundwork to more effectively participate in the AI TAM,' said Buchalter. 'Still a 'show-me' story, but one we're confident in.' Rome wasn't built in a day, says Buchalter, but the MI350 and MI400 feel like the AI GPU counterparts to AMD's early CPU platforms, which laid the foundation for a turning point. The event, he notes, tackled the very challenges that have hindered wider adoption of AMD's Instinct GPUs: expanding its ROCm software stack and developer community, and launching a competitive rack-scale solution by 2026. Altman shared his enthusiasm for the MI450X – slated for release in the second half of 2026 – highlighting its potential for both inference and training, thanks to the close collaboration between OpenAI and AMD, offering 'important early validation' for the product. AMD also showcased significant upgrades in ROCm 7 and pointed to its growing developer community as further momentum behind the platform. Buchalter acknowledges the significance of having seven of the ten largest AI players now using AMD chips. This includes early adopter Oracle, which is set to be one of the first to implement AMD's upcoming rack-scale solutions. The support is further reinforced by endorsements from major AI leaders like OpenAI, xAI, and Meta. 'That said,' he went on to add, 'we think AMD's sharp 2H25 AI GPU revenue ramp remains a 'show-me' story and is necessary to prove its competitiveness against NVIDIA (and ASIC rivals)… and drive investor confidence.' Moreover, investors will likely want concrete evidence that AMD can successfully scale its rack-scale solutions, especially considering Nvidia's widely known early struggles in this area (which now appear largely resolved). Nevertheless, Buchalter thinks the company is moving in the right direction. 'Against an expanding TAM, we think AMD is making the necessary gradual moves to cement its position as the de facto merchant alternative to NVIDIA,' the analyst summed up. All told, Buchalter assigns a Buy rating to AMD shares, although his $115 price target suggests the shares will stay rangebound for the time being. It will be interesting to see if Buchalter updates his target shortly. (To watch Buchalter's track record, click here) Elsewhere on the Street, the stock claims an additional 21 Buys and 11 Holds for a Moderate Buy consensus rating. At $127.23, the average price target suggests shares will climb 11% higher in the months ahead. (See AMD stock forecast) To find good ideas for AI stocks trading at attractive valuations, visit TipRanks' Best Stocks to Buy, a tool that unites all of TipRanks' equity insights.